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Sometimes, we hear about a character who doesn't really line up with they way they've been described, whether it be their abilities or their personality. Sometimes, though, this information all comes from a second character who is simply amazed at this character. They sing their praises, gushing their little hearts out. Okay, that's all well and good, Mister Fervent Admirer, but why are you praising them so openly?
This is what is known as Character Shilling. Whether it be an attempt to make us like the character, a way of quickly establishing that someone new is a badass a level above anything we've seen before or whatever the case may be, other people will be extremely impressed with this person and let we the viewers know about it. Whether they actually match up to the hype is optional. Sometimes they really are amazing, and sometimes we have ourselves a case of Informed Ability. Or worse, a Creator's Pet.
Remember, it's only really shilling when we don't know why such praise and admiration is being given. If they've already shown they can back it up, it probably doesn't count. In other words, this is not a place to complain about a character you hate being praised.
Compare Informed Attribute, Informed Ability and Creator's Pet, the last of which is what happens when this goes wrong and the fans just end up hating the shilled character. May lead to Stop Worshipping Me! if it's to the person's face and they're more modest. A character who shills himself in-universe may be a Fake Ultimate Hero or Miles Gloriosus.
Anime and Manga[]
- In Gundam Seed Destiny Heine Westenfluss is set up as an ace pilot like Athrun as well as charming and a really nice guy. Unfortunately, he doesn't get a chance to live up to his extreme reputation since he dies too soon.
- Early The World God Only Knows shills Haqua as being amazing, but it's actually part of an obvious setup to show that despite how talented she is the only one she's fooling is Elsie. She's been unable to get any results after graduating and is pretty depressed. Eventually, she does end up deserving her reputation.[1]
- Constantly done with Paul in Pokémon, who acts like a jerk to everyone and abuses his Pokemon in order to make them stronger, outright abandoning the ones who he finds to be a waste of time, and yet he's constantly called a "great trainer", who just clashes with Ash because of "different methods", rather than because, well, he's a jerk. When Ash beats him with one of his abandoned Pokemon he's actually seen apologizing and promising to be good from now on... or at least that's where the story looked like it was heading. What happened instead was Paul pulled a few slight signs of kindness completely out of nowhere with no development at all and then shrugs off his loss to Ash the way he does in his only other two losses of the series. They still acted like he somehow redeemed himself, despite not really changing that much.
- Inami from Working gets this from most of the cast whenever the spotlight is on her (and that's often), with the most coming from Poplar, who won't shut up on how cute Inami is. Though for most people, she's much cuter. Presumably, they're trying to make Takahashi, the guy Inami likes, think better of her, but they still overdo it a little. Even the Romantic False Lead spends more time praising Inami than looking for his Long Lost Sibling.
- Touma, the main character of Magical Record Lyrical Nanoha Force, was fairly bland in the first few chapters, up until it was revealed that he was the adopted little brother of Subaru, a far more popular character. While it's shown how they met, it doesn't quite show how they became so close, and the two don't even interact for a long while. It's basically just to say 'hey, Subaru likes him!' to the reader. It gets more obvious later on, when it's shown that other characters like Nanoha know and like him too, which happened entirely off-screen.
- Inazuma Eleven actually managed to subvert this one. When the team first set out to find and meet Fubuki, several characters start discussing rumors about what an amazingly strong and talented person he is, some of which are so over the top (such as "Fubuki the bear-killer") that they're likely parodying this trope. Everyone is quite surprised when they actually meet him and he's nothing like what they expected.
Fubuki: Oh, are you disappointed after seeing the real thing? |
- Played with (and possibly parodied) in the El Hazard OAV. Princess Fatora is highly praised by nearly every character who talks about her. When we finally meet her, though, one wonders why she was really missed at all.
- Transformers: The Headmasters pretty much exists for no other reason than to hype up the eponymous Headmasters. Everyone else, even the mighty Titans and Combiners, are suddenly useless and need the amazing Headmasters to come save the day.
Comic Books[]
- Happened with Kyle Rayner when he replaced Hal Jordan as Green Lantern. Having folks like Martian Manhunter and Superman (not to mention Batman and Sandman) say what a terrific guy you are, completely unsolicited, led to much eye-rolling even amongst fans of the character, who felt that such shilling validated many complaints that haters of the character had. Luckily, Rayner managed to survive the shilling and was officially rescued from the scrappy pile.
- It's been widely joked that Kyle got shilled specifically because DC were pissed off that fans (rightfully) saw how The Death of Superman and Azrael becoming Batman were temporary plotlines. DC were deadset that Kyle would stick, hence the shilling. However, Grant Morrison refused to give Kyle the same treatment in JLA. Yes, most of the team respected him, but he had to work to really be seen as something more than a rookie. And The Flash was open about his initial dislike of Kyle and it took a good amount of character development for them to become friends. As a result, Kyle Rayner grew his own crop of decidedly enthusiastic and loyal fans...
- Invoked in The Flash comics for Barry Allen after his recent return to life. Writer Geoff Johns acknowledged that people who haven't read any story with Barry in it before (basically anyone who started reading comics after the Crisis, which is to say, anyone under 30), will see him as a Replacement Scrappy for Wally, so his first priority in the Flash: Rebirth miniseries was to sell Barry to newer readers. The first issue of Rebirth is mostly scenes of every single major superhero in the DCU talking about how awesome Barry is, save for Kid Flash, who refuses to accept him because he's not the one he grew up with, essentially making him their Straw Fan.
- Occurs in regards to the character of Carlie Cooper in the Spider-Man comics. Much is made about how great a person she is, how perfect not only is she for Peter, but how perfect she is in general. Unfortunately, this sort of shilling has done little to endear her character to the general fanbase, as her positive character traits come off more as an informed ability while her more negative character traits are overlooked.
- Did we mention she resembles the daughter of the guy who pushed One More Day?
- The T-800 can come across as this in Transformers vs the Terminator. In the grounded(ish) world of the Terminator films, the T-800 is an unstoppable killing machine who is rightfully the Dreaded. In the Science Fantasy world of Transformers... it really isn't. Everyone says that it's a deadly warrior but in practice, the threat it poses is due to its cheat sheet of future knowledge about Cybertronian weaknesses and the Autobots doing most of the crossover's heavy lifting. If Optimus hadn't believed the best in everyone, Bumblebee would have crushed the T-800 into scrap metal within a minute of meeting it.
- The second season of Transformers Robots in Disguise featured a lot of "Humans Are Special" moments, Optimus Prime praising the people of Earth as having the drive and innovation that the Cybertronians lack. An attitude that humanity never really displayed. By and large, humanity, not entirely unreasonably, refused to ever move past the events of Transformers: All Hail Megatron to the point where it was, more often than not, the Cybertronians' desire for a new age of peace and change that forced humanity to change. To drive this point home, even humanity themselves frequently say that they're nowhere near as good and pure that Optimus thinks they are.
- This is a common complaint from Marvel fans who don't like Doctor Doom. Since Marvel is so determined to always keep Doom as the most dangerous man who ever lived, his critics complain that means always retconning Doom's defeats as a Doombot and giving him ever more power all the while people that should easily defeat him speak of him in great fear.
- The equivalent from DC Comics seems to be Darkseid's critics. For all that he's touted as Superman's Arch Enemy and the Ultimate Evil of the DCU, Darkseid is shown to have a pretty weak army and his technology (compared to planets like Krypton and Oa) isn't anything special. And even beyond that, his critics will argue that Trigon or the Anti-Monitor are worthier candidates for being DC's Ultimate Evil.
Fan Fiction[]
- The Fandom Specific Plot of the Danny Phantom fandom. While Danny is a selfless hero and a nice guy, not to mention he can pack an impressive punch, crossover fanfics take it Up to Eleven. Danny is the most selfless guy on the planet and the most powerful being to ever exist. Even when placed next to powerhouses like Ben 10 and Superman; who can do everything he can and more and aren't notably, even in the fanfics, any more or less selfless than Danny; everyone fawns at the Ghost Boy's feet for being so unfailingly mature and a borderline Physical God.
- A frequent hallmark of Transformers crossovers is to have everyone from the other property say how much more dangerous (both physically and mentally) their baddies are than the Decepticons despite how easily the Autobots plow through the other baddie's Mooks and the Decepticons' sheer destructive potential. It generally seems to be an overwrought explanation as to why the Autobots and Decepticons just don't step on the other baddie or carpet bomb them from afar.
- Jamie, Caitlin, and Emily from Hogwarts Exposed. Everyone fawns over them like they invented the wheel even when they're obnoxious, whiny, or bullying shy girls into nudism.
- Subverted with Corrin from the Fire Emblem Fates fic "A Brighter Dark." She mouths off to everyone, kills people for sport, uses sex as a weapon, and is incredibly racist towards the Hoshidans yet gets nothing but love and praise from everyone for half the fic. Then she commits more and more atrocities leading up to a massive Moral Event Horizon in which she kills the Hoshidan resistance with disease warfare via dark magic. At this point it becomes clear she's a Villain Protagonist to the point where Silas of all people gives up on her. Intentional or not, this reframes everyone's praise of her: they don't actually think she's wonderful, they're terrified of the potential for evil lurking within her.
- Most chapters in Defenders of the Universe had at least a few paragraphs that did nothing but put the story on hold to say how great Voltron was and/or hype up some great power of his. For example, Chapter 28 was not content with saying that Voltron had made an FTL jump, better to say that he broke every law of space and time to access a separate dimension. Despite this, he got thrown around about just as much as he did in canon. Even the Red Lion, a pyrokinetic, was in serious danger of losing to the fused form of the Ruby Squadron, who are immune to fire's harmful effects, from Steven Universe.
- Before the fic was adopted and rebooted by another, most chapters that followed Lotor's introduction did little more than hype him up as a superior, forward thinking successor to Zarkon who was undoubtedly even more dangerous than his father ever was. He was calmer and more rational sure, but he never seemed to be that much more dangerous.
- Most of The Last Son is little more than this, often saying how great and powerful Krypton was and that no other species in the universe could even come close to matching them. If the fic was specifically shilling only Superman however, then people generally looked the other way about this. Any other shilling moments, usually Power Girl's, are generally considered low points.
- The Fire Emblem: Three Houses fic "The Savior King, the Master Tactician, and the Queen of Liberation" exists solely to prop up Claude von Riegan as the true hero of all of Fodlan, particularly during the invasion of Garreg Mach where Seteth of all people declares Claude their leader (rather than Byleth, whom Rhea explicitly entrusted to take up her mantle should something happen to her during the battle).
Film[]
- Mercilessly parodied in Monty Python and The Holy Grail by Sir Robin's Minstrel, who keeps gushing in song about "Brave Sir Robin" (despite repeated commands to shut up) while Sir Robin is trying to avoid picking a fight, and goes on gushing about it even after Sir Robin has fled in abject cowardice.
Minstrel: Brave Sir Robin ran away! |
Literature[]
- This is, more or less, the only way that the two main characters in the Left Behind series ever interact with non-main characters. It's either Buck and Rayford are thinking about how special they are and what a privilege it is for the rest of their unnamed co-workers and friends to associate with them, or it's these unnamed co-workers and friends gushing about them. This can be seen as the authors ignoring the Show, Don't Tell method of storytelling, merely telling us how earnest, passionate, and sincere their characters are rather than actually showing any of these qualities.
- Parodied and Played for Laughs in the first two Discworld novels. Rincewind is the most incompetent and cowardly wizard on the Disc, even to the point that he can't spell the word right. His companion Twoflower, however, thinks he's the mightiest magician who ever lived. This really gets on Rincewind's nerves, especially when he's going on about what a mighty warrior he is, and all the wizzard wants to do is run far, far away.
- Can be pretty much applied to any of the main cast in Twilight. We're told how wonderful Edward and the Cullens are (from Bella's POV anyway), but their actions and behavior throughout the series suggest anything but.
Live-Action TV[]
- How I Met Your Mother began to do this in season 5 with Don. He was introduced as "the guy Robin would inevitably marry," but his subsequent appearances painted him as annoying and flawed. However, once he started showing romantic interest in Robin, he met the group and suddenly Marshall could not stop gushing about him. Their interactions went unseen but Marshall opens by saying that he is "smart, handsome and funny". This is jarring because two episodes ago we were supposed to hate the guy.
- At the same time that was going on, Barney was flanderized into a supreme womanizer who scored with every girl he hit on...and the rest of the cast inexplicably became his enthusiastic cheerleaders, even though in earlier seasons they'd only kind of put up with it and even expressed occasional disgust at some of Barney's slimier methods. They rooted for Barney every time he hit on a girl, actively helped him out at one point, and celebrated every time he scored (they did a lot of celebrating). It was as if the writers were desperately telling their viewers, "See? See? See how much better Barney is as an exaggerated caricature of himself than when he was paired with Robin?"
- Star Trek: The Next Generation:
- In one particularly glaring example from "Where No One Has Gone Before", a Sufficiently Advanced Alien known as "The Traveler" stopped-in seemingly for the exclusive purpose of telling the crew how wonderful Wesley was. While Wesley hadn't quite become a Creator's Pet by that point, further treatment along these lines basically ended up as one of the most definitive examples of Creator's Pet.
- Another TNG example, "The Outrageous Okona", did nothing actually outrageous except taking advantage of his incredibly hyped reputation as a wild maverick man of action to get laid. Popular with a young Teri Hatcher for sure, but not with the fans, who largely consider him a joke.
- Second only to Wesley is Will Riker. Picard (who seems to be the official "You Will Like This Guy" mouth piece for the show) was constantly touting Riker's leadership abilities and the fact that he'd passed on several Captain's posts of his own to stay with the Enterprise. Other characters would hype Riker's skills at "Activity X" as the plot demanded. But even when he got a Day in the Limelight episode to show those skills, the fans' reaction was a hearty "So what's so special about that?" At least he grew a beard...
- Babylon 5 had a Lower Deck Episode in its last season, featuring a couple of maintenance workers who end up praising new character Captain Lochley and telling her that she was OK in their book. Apparently, both of the two "little guys" were openly Author Avatars.
- Increasingly, Glee treats Will and Finn this way—particularly, other characters stand around gushing about how talented, good-hearted, and attractive they both are.
- One of the complaints about the first half of the Season 2 was that this went on a lot with Kurt Hummel in spite of sometimes treating his friends rather cruelly. This culminated in "Furt" which was basically a whole episode of Kurt-shilling. Thankfully they let off on it after that, but did so by sending Kurt to Dalton.
- Other characters constantly talk up Blaine as a talented, attractive dreamboat; especially in Season 3.
- In the sixth season of Bones, for the character of Hannah Burley there is constant reinforcement of her beauty, talent and intelligence. Other popular characters in the show (including Angela) constantly refer to Hannah and Dr Brennan as being "friends", although the scenes depicting their "friendship" seem awkward at best (especially one scene in which Hannah makes Brennan give her her sunglasses). Many fans found it frustrating, and it certainly didn't make the character any more likeable.
- On Degrassi, this happens quite a bit with Mia during Season 8, much to Holly J's (and many fans') annoyance.
- One particularly Egregious example was in Degrassi Takes Manhattan, when Jay was telling Spinner that Emma wouldn't screw him over like Jane did. Because Emma NEVER cheated on anybody. It's especially perplexing that Jay would talk Emma up like this, because a few years ago, she basically prostituted herself to him. For rubber bracelets.
- Rob in Survivor. The reunion for Redemption Island was especially terrible, essentially being an hour of "Isn't Rob awesome?" in between talking to Russell and asking if he'd return, or asking if Phillip was that crazy. Many fans cheered just because the worst season of Survivor finally ended, and with the thoughts that Rob would finally go away.
- Lana from Smallville spent the first several years of the show's run being talked up and portrayed as the Golden Girl. Guys fell in love with her at the drop of a hat, her friends went on about how amazing she was, and at one point she was given superpowers to make her look even better. Unfortunately, the way it was handled made her one of the most mercilessly hated and bashed characters in all of fandom. This got to a point where anyone who wrote or talked about the show just naturally assumed Lana was The Worst and that nobody actually liked her, even though she did have her fans.
- A lot of characters in The Wire's third season comment on just how bad and cold Marlo Stanfield is, actually saying that he's "for real". As it turns out, he really is.
- By the latter half of season 2 of Stargate Universe, Scott's line telling Young, "You are a good commander!" was added to every episode intro, apparently in an attempt to convince the audience of just that. He wasn't.
- Scott himself. He's constantly touted on being a great leader, really gets around and the creators even called him the "Jack O'Neill of ten years ago." Fans countered that the comparison doesn't work because we actually like Jack.
- NBC's fantasy-police procedural Grimm. The main character Nick Burkhardt is a Grimm (a group of super-powered humans who supposedly police the supernatural world to keep humanity safe and/or maintain balance between humans and supernaturals), but Nick has no obvious talents or abilities other than being able to see non-humans for what they really are. Yet, every time he encounters a new non-human, they are instantly frightened and intimidated by him because he is a Grimm, and they are in awe of the bad-ass things that Grimms supposedly do (although the audience is never shown this through Nick, nor does the audience ever see any other Grimms in action). Furthermore, Nick's supernatural side-kick Monroe constantly talks him up, although there is seemingly no reason for the praise. To his credit, Nick does seem like a decent cop.
- Actually the reason they're so terrified of him is because Grimms have become The Dreaded of the Supernatural World. In addition to their reputation, Nick does later takes several levels in badass and demonstrate that Grimms do possess super-strength and resilience that puts them on equal footing with most Wessen.
- Doctor Who:
- The title character can sometimes be a victim of this, especially under Steven Moffat's pen. The Moff's era as showrunner even opens by Eleven using his reputation to scare away the Atraxi and the next season reveals that some people see him as a Physical God, something that never happened in the classic series. There were a few shades of this in RTD's first tenure as showrunner but they were few and far between.
- The Daleks can have this befall them. The Doctor likes speaking of how much he hates them and how they're so much more dangerous they are than his other enemies but thanks to the physical limitations of their designs, they're never quite as dangerous as they're touted as, usually succeeding because their foes grab an Idiot Ball.
- Rose Tyler. After she left, the Doctor spent all of Series 3 speaking about how great she was, as in Canon Sue levels, and how Martha could never live up to her. Nothing in the show actually seemed to back this up. If anything, Martha proved a Badass Normal to a level beyond Rose. Even Rose's increased badass cred in Series 4 was primarily down to her wealthy father's resources rather than her doing while Martha was just that plucky and determined.
- The Thirteenth Doctor's Fam. For all the Doctor waxes on about how great they are and how much they've grown as people, most of the audience has the opposite reaction, viewing them as Flat and Static Characters who contribute next to nothing to the episodes. In fact, the one episode where the Fam explicitly requests to go somewhere, "Demons of the Punjab", turns out to be a fixed point in time that the Doctor outright says not to interfere in. But the Doctor still says that the Fam are the absolute best of humanity when their absence would change next to nothing in the episodes.
- Critics of Donna Noble accuse the show of this. While the Tenth and Fourteenth Doctors wax on and on about how Donna is the most important woman in the universe, this is backed up by virtually nothing on-screen. While Donna's fans cite that she was the Doctor's best friend and helped save the universe, her critics note that the same can be said about 4/5 NuWho companions (including Donna's immediate successor, Amy Pond) and about half of all companions across the show's tenure and the Doctor Who Expanded Universe.
- The Master. For all that the show touts them as a dangerous Evil Counterpart who is Always Someone Better to the Doctor, the Master has consistently been shown to be Always Second Best compared to the Doctor, messing with powers they barely have control over and sometimes needing the Doctor to get them out of the mess they made.
- Rachel in Friends. She's touted as a great mother and the hottest woman ever, but she's quite lazy as a mother and doesn't seem to attract any more men than Monica and Phoebe. She's also touted as an amazing girlfriend despite the toxic on-again-off-again nature of her relationship with Ross and her other failed dates.
Tabletop Games[]
- Warhammer 40000 does this so often it is hardly notable, with every faction update portraying said faction as mighty and unstoppable and everyone else should tremble at their very presence (except for the Eldar, who never escape being the galaxy's Butt Monkey), purposefully to sell more models. However, the Ultramarines receive a ridiculous amount of shilling even by these standards, 5th Edition changing them from the "generic" Space Marine chapter, whose main characteristic was being Lawful Stupid, to the epitome of Imperial virtue and the pinnacle to which all other Space Marine chapters aspire to emulate. Said codex being mostly written by a confessed Ultramarine fanboy might have had something to do with it.
Video Games[]
- Here's a fun exercise for Horde players in World of Warcraft: While leveling to the cap, keep track of the number of NPCs you encounter who refer to Garrosh Hellscream as a master tactician or military genius. This would probably not be so aggravating if he ever actually displayed any of his supposed skill, but usually we're just told about it and the times we actually see him in action he's incompetent at best (notably, he sends the player character on a Suicide Mission in Borean Tundra, and his attempt to ambush the Alliance in Twilight Highlands backfires spectacularly when Deathwing shows up with a fleet of Twilight dragons and wrecks the now-defenseless Horde fleet).
- And to add insult to injury you then incite an insurrection against the Dragonmaw by.....talking about how awesome Garrosh is. It doesn't help matters that the horde introduction is much longer and more interesting than the Alliance's which just has you get in a drunken dwarf's plane and pass out.
- By the time of Blaz Blue Continuum Shift Extend, Makoto Nanaya has been enjoying quite a bit shilling for someone who's just minding her own business rather than taking part of the plot actively. Hazama considers her a Spanner in the Works, Relius Clover becomes obsessed with her apparent 'strong soul', as he described, and the one moment she met the resident snobby bitch Rachel... the latter wasn't even being snobby and instead praising her like hell. Whether she lived up to the shilling is for the sequel to report.
- Richard the Lionhart in the original Stronghold Crusader is stated to be one of three hardest opponent later being joined by the Emir for 4. The game also lists him as this but compared to the other top four while his attacking power is incredible and has a decent enough economy his defense is absolutely pathetic with him often making a simple square castle with 4 towers and it being common for him to only have 1-3 archers total on his walls. This makes him much easier to defeat than the other "good" characters.
- The community often makes out the Caliph to be this due to always setting stuff on fire but in reality he is the second weakest Arabic lord due to no anti siege towers (despite him having more archers on the tiny towers he does build than any other lord), not having as good as an economy as others, and being much less effective at attacking than said other Arabian lords aside from Sultan.
Visual Novels[]
- Played for dark humor during the fifth and sixth chapter of Umineko no Naku Koro ni where the narration and everyone keep going on about Erika Furudo. The problem is that there's so much gushing because it's Lambdadelta's script and she's also callous and an incredible bitch. She does end up satisfying her reputation. But she's still a bitch.
Western Animation[]
- Owen on Total Drama Island. Most of his accomplishments are either a) based on dumb luck or b) somehow related to eating, yet in some episodes the other characters will praise him excessively. In the first episode of Total Drama Action, for example, he manages to avoid being caught by the monster simply because he's too fat to pick up, then eats a bunch of fake food because he wouldn't just stop and listen to Chris tell him it was fake. But by coincidence he happened to burp out the key they were supposed to find, and immediately the scene cuts to several other characters praising his success.
- Played for Laughs during the infamous "Poochie" episode of The Simpsons; when pitching the character, Homer talks about putting extra emphasis on the new character by suggesting that, whenever he's not onscreen, other characters should be asking, "Where's Poochie?" When the episode actually airs, Itchy and Scratchy's very few lines center on how awesome Poochie is.
- Starlight Glimmer from My Little Pony: Friendship Is Magic was in a situation very similar to Poochie. Most episodes of Season 6 and 7 had the other ponies speak about how wonderful and skilled she was, but she was never shown to be quite as amazing as they always said.
- Played for Laughs in the B-plot of the American Dad! episode "American Fung" where everyone gushes over Black Hole Sue Fung Wah despite him being a silly Man Child who only offers pretty basic ideas.
- ↑ when you take into account that she's basically a low level supervisor who has just graduated high school and is thus about the equivalent of 18